
Image is a cover of Terror Tales (March-April 1939) and contains the text “Terror Tales. 15¢. Francis James is Back!! with a new, chill-packed novel, Bride of the Serpent. House of the Mummy Men: stark, fascinating terror novelette by Edith & Ejler Jacobson.” Found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
Author Archives: faustus
Coffin surprise

This artwork is An Intruder In My Tomb by Mexican artist Rafael Gallur. In response to a DeviantArt comment that the work “looks old school”, Gallur responded “This work is of the Seventy. [1970s?] MY ART BORN IN THAT WONDERFUL OLD SCHOOL. THANKS!”
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
More Saucy Movie Tales

Original post here. Image contains the text “Saucy Movie Tales. Royalty in Exile. Marcia of the Movies. ‘Bloody Morning’ by Wayne Chesley.” Sourced via singoshibari. Original text:
Royalty In Exile http://ift.tt/1keM2Dz
Field guide to tentacle attacks

Original post here. Sourced to bbstatdrawn via singoshibari. Image contains the text:
Professor Marjorie’s Annotated Field Guide to Tentacle Attacks. Featured sub-class affixers.
An affixer is any type of tentacle beast the uses some form of external substance or symbiosis to trap and hold its victims immobile. In this case, the subject becomes entangled in the living mesh of a simple Type 1 Earth Demon. The web-like structure has the ability to to act autonomously, capturing and immobilizing potential victims, and alerting the demon who will then take control. Here, a healthy young female has been exposed and repositioned to the demon’s liking, and the mesh hardened into a semi-rigid cage of sorts. Immobilized, she will be able to do little more than watch helplessly as the demon moves up between her splayed limbs and begins arousing her sexually.
This particular creature is only interested in tormenting her (it is a demon after all) and so will probably start by siimply stroking and licking her entire body[,] including her sex, for several hours — more more deeply into her apex only when she is nearly insane with the need for release and literally begging the creature to take her. Demons gain considerable power when their victims willingly request intercourse.
Once it does enter her, however, her fate will almost certainly be sealed as the demon will engulf her whole nether region within its maw, wrapping powerful appendages around her hips that literally lock its phallic tongue deeply within her. Dozens of smaller tendrils lining the demons’s throat will then settle over her womanhood, coating her entire sex with a highly stimulating lubricant slime as it teases her petals and clitoris. This, along with deep thrusts of the demon’s tongue will quickly bring her to ecstasy, and will continue to do so again and again and again until this girl literally expires from overstimulation or exhaustion.
Bug

Original post here. Sourced to severeinternaldamage by girlveal. Original text:
Discredited by =Mr-NiK
Satan’s Incubator

Image is a cover of Terror Tales (November-December 1938) and contains the text “Terror Tales. 15¢ Death is My Bride. A novelette of eerie mystery by Raymond Whetstone. Satan’s Incubator. Chill-packed feature-length novel by Donald Dale. Cummings, Sperry, Kobler, Byrne.” Found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
Octo-bride

According to a blog post at Frankensteinia, this artwork is The Birth Of The Bride, by artist Frank Bell, who has done a lot of Frankenstein-themed pop art. The artist’s website is here (autoplaying sound warning). Thematically, the art is (of course) an homage to Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus (or, as it is sometimes affectionately known, Venus On The Halfshell.
Image provenance by Bacchus at Erosblog.
Despair, Alice!
Classic mad science illustrated

Original post here. Original text:
Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde by Steve Ring.
Satan’s House Party

Image is a cover of Terror Tales (March-April 1930) and contains the text “Terror Tales. 15¢. Satan’s House Party. A novel of terror and black passion by Francis James. Complete terror novelette of a thing long dead — but restless! My Neighbor the Corpse by Arthur Leo Zagat. Dale, Byrne, Graham and others.” Found in this gallery at The Golden Age.
